Pages

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

LIVING MY DREAM

When I was fourteen years old I wrote something in my journal that
shaped the rest of my life. I wrote down a goal to publish my first
novel by the time I was thirty.

From that time forward, writing was my obsession, the driving force
behind nearly everything I did. I did not meet that goal. At thirty
years old I was busy with two very young children, heaps of laundry and
sinks full of dirty dishes. Somewhere along the line, I made a choice to
be a full-time mom, and that choice took precedence over becoming the
famous best-selling author I had always dreamed of becoming.ut I kept writing. In those early years I wrote articles about anything
and everything - in local publications - for free. Then I became a
columnist for those publications and a few others - and I got paid - a
little. Then I ended up with my own newspaper column that ran in three
different papers. Google revealed that I was being quoted on blogs and
my words were spread abroad. It felt good to be noticed. But everything I
wrote - in magazines and newspapers - was fleeting. Read once and then
forgotten. That's the nature of magazines and newspapers. Tomorrow there
is always something new to replace what is written today.

I yearned to write something that would last. My heart kept reaching
back to that goal set long ago to be a novelist. Novels last. Some books
stick in your mind and soul forever. They become a part of you. They
are cherished. They are loved like part of the family. Some books I read
thirty years ago still bring tears to my eyes when I tell my kids about
them (and insist they read them, too.) That's what I wanted.
Immortality. For my words to be remembered long after I am gone.

The truth was that during all those years of writing, I never wrote a
novel because I was afraid. Afraid I wasn't good enough. Afraid I didn't
have what it takes. But a funny thing happened. After thirteen years of
writing all that other stuff, I got pretty good at it. And by the time I
had had enough of magazines and newspapers, I had gained the experience
and confidence to give novel writing a try. I was right, though. I
wasn't good enough. At least not at first. My first novel sucked. But I
kept writing. I never stopped writing.

When my first novel was finally published in 2012, I was
forty-three years old, thirteen years overdue. But that's okay. Since then I've had three more books come out, and I'm having the time of my life.